Mike
a dumb question, an obvious question, an irrelevant question - I'm not sure which. But it's been swirling around my head for weeks:
What exactly would make a golf course great for the modern game circa 1910, and were most of those making such judgments in print in agreement about it?
Are the architectural "principles" that I assume underlie that designation for courses built today the same as the ones that said experts knew about and appreciated in 1910 America?
Am I putting the cart before the horse in talking about architectural principles when it comes to golf in 1910?
Thanks
Peter
Actually, Mke - maybe I shouldn't be floating the idea of the fundamental principles of great golf architecture at all, in either context -- then or now. The trouble is, since I got here I've always assumed that these principles exist, out there in the world of ideas, and that past and present they are sometimes stumbled upon and sometimes consciously realized and sometimes even articulated and battled over....but maybe I'm just flat out wrong about all that too. Maybe the "art" supercedes anything and everything else, a moveable feast of aesthetic understanding and appreciation but coupled with the mundane and prosaic and changing "needs" of the game, e.g. Par 5s that needed to be 400 yards and then 500 yards and then 600 yards...